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After reading the very quick read "The Flinch",
I decided to knock a few things off of what I call my 'Flinch List' every
day. It really just follows the advice most people have heard of 'every
day, do something that scares you.' Not scare in the "I'm going to go
taunt a bear" kind of thing. That should scare you. There's a reason
that scares you - because taunting bears will get you hurt. But
some things scare us that aren't life-threatening, and in fact are
probably very good ideas. They're just usually very uncomfortable ideas.

Here's an example. Taking the route to work that requires me to walk
across a large highway (even though there is a crosswalk and walk sign)
doesn't scare me exactly, at least not the way a bear would. But it
does make me flinch a little inside. So I skip it. In fact taking any
other route than my "normal" route gives me a little flinch response
inside. I am very much a creature of habit. I like my routines. Last
week I took the highway-crossing route (and obviously lived to tell the
tale.) It was fantastic - much shorter than my other route and I got to
see some of the new buildings that have just been finished around
campus. It's a stupid thing - but it's one less flinch.

Tango was a huge flinch, when I remember how I started that journey a
little over three years ago. It was not only one big flinch - "start to
learn tango" - but a flinch response I had to face every time I went to
a class, entered a milonga, or went to a practica. Every single time.
Even now, every time I go to a workshop, new milonga, or to a different city to
dance - there it is again. The flinch. I feel it. Recognize and
acknowledge it. Then I walk right through it. Sometimes it sucks. Most of the time it's more than worth it.

Making my first video Skype call, to someone I had never met on the other side of the world, was a flinch.
Calling my dad for help with my car a couple of weeks ago was a flinch.
Every time I enter a room to train or speak, I flinch.
Every time I dance with someone new, I flinch.
Getting rid of possessions I was keeping only because I felt guilty about who gave them to me/how much they cost/how much I should like them - made me flinch.

My trip to Buenos Aires is one really big flinch. Every once in
awhile I think it might be easier to face the bear. Actually, that's
because the trip is made of so many smaller flinches I'll have to face, that
it's almost overwhelming.

The TSA-grope flinch.
The "I don't speak the
language" flinch.
The "no one will dance with me" flinch.
The "I have to
figure out how much to pay the taxi driver in pesos" flinch.

Contrary to what must be a very popular belief - telling me not to worry
about it does not decrease the flinch one little bit. Ultimately the
only thing that gets rid of the flinch response, is facing it - doing
the deed. Or, referring to my favorite Pema Chodron quote, leaning into
the sharp points. Getting uncomfortable.

The author of The Flinch, Julien Smith, says if there's a flinch
response (and it isn't in response to something dangerous) there's
something to learn. There's something that needs doing. Listening to my
gut instinct can be the right thing to do - but when there's no actual
danger, it's time to take a look at what I'm really afraid of.

By the way, updating this blog after so long, was a flinch.

I don't know why. It just was.

That's why I knew I had to write about it.

If you're interested in reading the Flinch and don't want to get it
through Amazon (for free), you can read it in .pdf form for free here.